Across the country, patients need physical therapy to heal from surgery or injuries. The need for therapists is rapidly increasing, yet it’s difficult to find enough skilled professionals. This is especially true in rural areas.
The Rehab Lab Team is working to help solve this problem by developing innovative research and insights to enable patients to gain more function, heal faster, and enjoy greater ability and independence. The hospital’s design celebrates this work and reflects the client’s focus on ability over disability, says Abigail Clary, director of health at HDR and principal for the project.
For example, the Rehab Lab at RIC is housed in a forward-looking space with floor-to-ceiling windows that showcase its work. Its interdisciplinary teams include engineers, architects, and rehabilitation professionals who collaborate to develop new research that aims to help patients recover more quickly and achieve better outcomes.
Rehab Lab Team: Meet the Experts Leading Your Rehabilitation
One of the team’s latest efforts is an integrated FabLab designed to manufacture assistive devices using 3D printing. This innovation has already been transferred to three other adopters, demonstrating the effectiveness of this concept for manufacturing assistive devices.
Another new effort is a system that uses optical motion tracking and electrical impedance tomography to measure muscle engagement during unsupervised physical rehabilitation. Called MuscleRehab, the system can detect when a patient isn’t progressing and alert them to reach out to their physical therapist.
Scientists at the VTC Smart Rehab Lab are working on a similar, affordable system called SARAH to connect stroke survivors with telerehabilitation. This effort, which received a $1.1 million grant from the National Science Foundation, is a partnership between Virginia Tech’s College of Engineering and Fralin Biomedical Research Institute, and Carilion Clinic. It will use cellular connections to enable the system to be used by patients throughout Carilion’s 20-county service area, including many rural communities without high-speed internet.…